Showing posts with label Red Alert Cocktail Dress. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Red Alert Cocktail Dress. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 12, 2021

A blast from the part ... press from 2018


As I was looking back to some old info, I came across this interview and video from 2008!! 
I had the pleasure of meeting with and speaking to Chris Bergeron from the MetroWest Daily News.  
The video is particularly interesting because all of the dresses/sculptures that I was working on are either not finished or not even around anymore?!? The 'dress of glass ...' is still in the box that I moved it in when I changed studios and I keep thinking that I will finish it?!? but the others are a thing of the past.  In fact I believe I did a video of a studio assistant breaking out of the red stick piece ... need to find that video.

I have also learned the hard way that articles and such do not always stay available of the web, so here is the article in full.  And even though some of the pieces that I was working on are not around anymore my reasons for creating and my beliefs about the dressproject are still relevant. 

Ready to wear: The art of Natick’s Virginia Fitzgerald



Sporting a paste-on tattoo of the Hindu goddess Shiva, Virginia Fitzgerald fashions a dress from hundreds of dog tags in her downtown Natick studio that resembles a child’s playhouse.

She moves barefoot past dresses she’s made from glass and eggshells, red licorice sticks and carrots.

A frock made of poems hangs by the door of the Pond Street studio where the Natick artist and mother of two young girls works on The Dress Project she created, carrot by seashell.

Over the last two years, Fitzgerald has created her own artistic line of “sculptural” dresses, stitching clothespins and ideas into the fabric of her deeply personal vision.

Though her daughters, Maya, 10, and Harriet, 7, stuck the tattoo on her back while playing, Fitzgerald said she identifies with its meaning. “Shiva is the goddess of destruction and creativity,” she said. “If anything, that’s what the dresses have taught me.”

For Fitzgerald, making the dresses is an expression of her own “experience as an artist, mother, wife and woman” in today’s world.

She has come to regard her dresses as “a multifaceted metaphor for birth, sexuality, a woman’s role to family and society: past, present and future.”

“As a child I was put in a dress. Lots of women grow up making connections between their prom dresses or wedding dresses and the events of their lives,” she said.

Whether using flower blossoms or pumpkins, for her the image of a dress “represents layers of the spiritual, emotional and physical presence of being female.”

Describing a dress formed from snaky ropes, Fitzgerald said, “Some people get scared. Some say it’s sexy. It makes some people think of S and M.”

Since its serendipitous beginning when playing with her daughters on a Maine beach, Fitzgerald’s Dress Project has grown into a vocation “with an energy and momentum all its own.”

In addition to earlier paintings, she’s exhibited her dresses in shows at Gallery 55 in Natick, Danforth Museum of Art in Framingham and recently at the Infinity Pool Court at the Natick Collection shopping center. In 2008 she won an award at the Concord Arts Association’s juried members show.

She expects to show new work in four fall exhibits at Bromfield Gallery in Boston this August; Natick Arts Open Studios on Oct. 4 and 5; ArtSpace in Maynard in October and November; and the Dana Hall School from Oct. 20 to Nov. 21.

Raised in Chicago, Fitzgerald was drawn to art as a child, sneaking up into the attic to draw pictures in old sketchbooks. “I was always the kid with the crayons,” she recalled.

Fitzgerald earned a bachelor’s degree in art at Kenyon College where she focused on printmaking and design. While later studying at the Studio Arts Center International in Florence, Italy, she began experimenting with conceptual sculptures including a chicken wire aquarium.

In 1992 Fitzgerald started a wholesale accessory and hand-painted design business, and after seven years switched to freelance illustration for announcements and greeting cards.

Like great oaks and gowns made of yellowing leaves, The Dress Project began with a tiny seed, in Fitzgerald’s case, a sticky wad of chewing gum.

“I was playing with Harriet at Elm Bank. We’d finished blowing bubbles and she asked what can we do now. I said we could make art with it,” she remembered. After going home and making a little dress from Harriet’s already-been-chewed gum, Fitzgerald awaited further inspiration.

Not long afterward, Fitzgerald, husband Steve Rovniak and their daughters were vacationing at Wells Beach, Maine, when a swarm of ladybugs made her wonder childlike about what kind of dresses they’d wear.

“The floodgates opened,” Fitzgerald said.

For three days, she scratched dress shapes in the sand. She decorated them with seaweed and kelp and watched the tides “take the dress back to the sea.”

“It was bordering on performance art in a way,” Fitzgerald said. “I kept drawing in my sketchbook. Talk about an obsession.”

Soon, to protest “overzealous fencing” of a favorite spot in Illinois, she made a dress of sticks clinging to a chain-link fence. And she later exhibited her Rose Dress in Gallery 55 in downtown Natick.

In time, Fitzgerald began using new materials to make more complex dresses like her Eat More Vegetables Dress to promote healthy nutrition and her 3,000 and Counting Dress, which used faux dog tags to protest the Iraq war.

After seeing airport screeners confiscate bottles larger than three ounces from passengers, she made her Red Alert Cocktail Dress from bottles filled with red liquid. “That’s a perfect example of The Dress Project. I know where I’m coming from,” she said. “A lot of people have different reactions. They think it’s about recycling or protecting the environment. They should have their own responses. I’m just the conduit.”

She stressed her dresses aren’t designed to express one specific concept but to prompt male and female viewers to consider them on her own terms.

“I like people to walk around them. Viewers should be able to have their own personal experience,” she said.



Monday, October 3, 2011

to dress tag or not to dress tag?!?!

To dress tag, or not to dress tag, that is the question:
Whether 'tis nobler in heart & mind to endure
The slings and arrows of a run-of-the-mill life,
Or to take arms against a sea of the ordinary,
And by dress tagging, end them? To tag, to sleep ... 
no more;

(my apologies to Mr. Shakespeare)



Mystic, CT, after delivering 'insatiable' to the Mystic Arts Center for their Form and Fantasy show
Form and Fantasy: A Contemporary Twist on Fiber Art
 September 30 - November 12 ~ Opening Reception - Thursday, October 6th from 5:30pm-7pm



Dress Tagging while visiting Red Alert Cocktail Dress at the Boston Children's Museum's  exhibit ~
September 15 - November 27, 2011

can u see the dress???


@ my favorite restaurant, flour, down the street from  the BCM
Flour Bakery, Fort Point Channel12 Farnsworth St.,a perfect place to go after a visit to the Boston Children's Museum!! thumbs up from our entire group!!!
their tag line ~ Make life sweeter, Eat dessert first!! (what do u think Mom?? :)


a little something extra @ the FPAC store
then next door to flour is the Fort Point Artist Community Store ~ 

@ the opening of Here Now at the Sprinkler Factory, Worcester, MA
Barthelson  Crane: here  now
Sprinkler Factory Gallery
Opening Reception: Saturday, October  1,  5 to 8 pm
Artists Talk: Sunday October 23,  3:00 pm
October 1 - 30, 2011



experimenting with tagging



'May this dress help you find your inner baker'
this tag may have been too suggestive?!?
this 'tag' I put in a busy JoAnn's Fabric, thinking that the creative clientele would be open to picking up a dress, but it stayed put for the hour or so that I was shopping :(?!?! I am dying to see one get picked up!!!)

this made me question my whole dress tagging endeavor ~ is this insanity??? why am I doing this?? why am I throwing one more 'thing' into my already full life?? last week, besides delivering artwork and submitting artwork, I got to deal with a dead chicken, a broken pipe, flooded house and then lost my all keys for a truly uncomfortable amount of time?!?

but even as I question this latest obsession,  I can't deny this burning desire to put these 'tags' out in the world.  Even if they are never picked up & end on in the trash ~ they might bring a smile to someone before it is thrown out.  And I have so much fun figuring out what 'intention' to put on each dress and where to put it, so I guess the dress tagging will continue!! so keep your eyes open AND if you want to be part of the fun ~ email me or comment below and I will send you some dress tags!! But beware - it is addicting :) Peace


Tuesday, September 20, 2011

on the road again . . .

Last week I once again packed up my Red Alert Cocktail Dress to take her on the road.  This time she was going to the Boston Children's Museum for the In the Bag exhibit.  It is quite a production so I thought I'd share some of the journey.

first I take off all the bottles...

& refresh any that are cloudy...

then I pack everything up....
waiting in the hall to be loaded

all loaded on the pushcart

in the freight elevator


on the loading dock of my studio

unloading at the BCM in the gallery

& the rebuilding begins....

in all her glory at the opening reception!!!
The BCM did a great job displaying the Red Alert Cocktail Dress!! 
and the opening reception was quite a wonderful event ~ besides the inspiring & provocative exhibit put together by Liz Milwe and Peter Wormserwe dined on Island Creek Oysters from Duxbury, MA, so yum!!!  
Then the party walked over to Lot F Gallery in a glorious Fall evening, where we viewed the work of Todd Robertson, dined on delicious Thai food and danced, 
it was a wonderful evening!!

I am so honored that Red Alert Cocktail Dress was included in this significant show!!
Click here it read a press release talking about the importance of this exhibit.
thank you & peace

Friday, September 16, 2011

Opening tonight!! Red Alert's coming out!!

Red Alert Cocktail Dress is part of In the Bag
In the Bag
Opening Reception at Boston Children's Museum:
Friday, Sept 16, 2011 from 6 - 8 p.m.

The reception will be followed by dinner at:
Lot F Gallery, 145 Pearl Street #4Boston, MA




the art & politics of the reusable bag movement
Artists and communities working together to save the planet.

September 16 - November 30, 2011
In the Gallery at Boston Children's Museum
308 Congress Street
Boston, MA 02210
  

FEATURED ARTISTS 
    Miggs Burroughs

    Virginia Fitzgerald

    Virginia Fleck

    Julian Gilbert 
Karen Guancione

Sarah Hollis Perry

Dan Price

Dan Steinhilber  


Thursday, September 8, 2011

Red Alert Cocktail Dress comes to Beantown

Opening Reception ~ Friday, Sept. 16th, 2011 ~ 6-8pm ~ hope to see you there!!! peace

the art & politics of the reusable bag movement
Artists and communities working together to save the planet.

September 16 - November 30, 2011
In the Gallery at Boston Children's Museum
308 Congress Street
Boston, MA 02210
  
Opening Reception at Boston Children's Museum:
Friday, Sept 16, 2011 from 6 - 8 p.m.
RSVP by September 6th
(617) 426-6500 x245 or
Mayers@BostonChildrensMuseum.org


The reception will be followed by dinner at:
Lot F Gallery, 145 Pearl Street #4
Boston, MA

FEATURED ARTISTS 
    Miggs Burroughs

    Virginia Fitzgerald

    Virginia Fleck

    Julian Gilbert 
Karen Guancione

Sarah Hollis Perry

Dan Price

Dan Steinhilber  
Copyright 2011 Boston Children's Museum 

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

thank you Puffin Foundation!!!!

Last week the mail brought me good news; no, great news, phenomenal news. I received news that The Puffin Foundation is giving me a GRANT to create/finish my piece, ripple ~ Yahoo!!!! This is such exciting news!!! To receive a grant is such validation of one's work and vision, as well as a financial boom. This grant could not have come at a better time!!! My job at Dana Hall has come to an end and I have been dying to get back into the studio, but there is
always that ever-present incomegoblin.... but now I have something to feed him for a month or two :). So instead of looking ahead to a summer of employment uncertainty, I can plan a summer working away in my studio~ guilt-free (what will that feel like?!?)

The Puffin Foundation does great work ~ "continuing the dialogue between art and the lives of ordinary people." Their mission being..“ the Puffin Foundation Ltd. has sought to open the doors of artistic expression by providing grants to artists and art organizations who are often excluded from mainstream opportunities due to their race, gender, or social philosophy.”

And besides providing grants for artists, they also have wonderful exhibition spaceswhere they put on thought- provoking and provaocative shows. Currently at the Puffin Cultural Forum in Teaneck, NJ is the traveling exhibit, In the Bag. This show "traces the history of the reusable bag movement and presents creative alternatives to using plastic shopping bags, in cluding beautifully designed reusable bags made from billboards, juice boxes, rice bags, and discarded plastic bags."

I am proud to say, that for the exhibit in NJ the curator, Merri Milwe, invited me to show my Red Alert Cocktail dress, which I was happily did. The exhibit runs from June 3rd - July 21st.


I applied for a Puffin Grant to help me complete my piece 'ripple' (it's working name). 'ripple' is a newer rendition of my large dag tag dress which was called '3,000 and counting'. '3,000 and counting' (made in 2006-2007) was about the dead soldiers in the Iraq conflict - very literal. But I was never happy was the way that dress looked, the shape. So when the dress was finished being in the provocative show, A Call to Art at Gallery 55, Natick, MA, I brought it back to my studio and cut it in half ~ much to the chagrin of many. But I didn't like it and I knew it could be better.

As the pieces of the dress sat in my studio I was struggling with how i wanted to remake it. While in it's deconstructed state, the dress did 'spawn' two smaller and poignant dog tag dresses ~ "in memory of..." and " do they
know its Christmas?". Two dresses that have been shown a multitude of times, evoking much thought and conversation. But still, the large dog tag dress sat in disarray. I would work on it but still wasn't sure where it was going. By this point there were way more than 3,000 dead from this war ... did I get more dog tags to keep up with the death toll? But I realized it was about more than dead soldiers. As the time past I began more aware of how the affects of the war were so far-reaching ~ not just the dead and their families, but so much more ~ the child who has been shuffled around to different care-givers because of parents' military duty and stress of the co-worker of the girlfriend who was murdered by her boyfriend who suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder. The stories are many and I want represent that aspect of this crisis ~ the ripple affect of this conflict. So that is what I proposed to the Puffin Foundation and that is what they decided to fund!! So thank you Puffin Foundation, because this is no small undertaking, and to have your endorsement that you believe in this project enough to fund it it is priceless. below is the description that I included in the grant!

My project is to create a large, sprawling sculptural dress commenting on ripple effect that recent and past military involvement has on everyone ~ the soldiers, their loved ones, their families and children, workplaces and schools, communities and society as a whole. The repercussions are far reaching and the issues are complicated.

My proposed piece, “ripple” is its working title, is important in that it will facilitate dialogue about our continual engagement in military situations, and our dependency on a military economy. With “ripple” my goal is to have people stop, look, think, feel, engage and communicate.


This piece will build off the power and energy of an earlier work, “in memory of...”, which also addresses war. Made out of dog tags ‘decorated’ with photos of soldiers who have already given their lives, “in memory of...” provides a safe and scared arena for consideration of the sacrifices war demands. Its presence quiets many, and even brings some to tears. “ripple” will also consist of dog tags, along with beads, charms and other material to represent the nonmilitary.


My truth is simple. My voice is gentle, yet compelling. The ideas that I deal with are complex. I offer an alternative to fear-based thinking or even lack of thinking. My work elicits fresh thinking, engaging people to generate their own thoughts and opinions. With your funding I will have the means to bring “ripple” to fruition, a piece that fulfills the mission of the Puffin Foundation; “...continuing the dialogue between art and the lives of ordinary people.”


peace

Friday, December 11, 2009

from Gallery Z.... join us this weekend

Please join us this weekend at Gallery Z!!
Gallery hours 12-8PM Saturday with a Special Sunday Event!!


This Sunday, December 13, 1:00 - 3:00PM Gallery Z is hosting a Champagne Toast to celebrate with all the artists included in this month's exhibition, "Functional Objects of Desire".

We're is thrilled to host this new, unique, and one-of-a-kind exhibition for our last show of the year. This show aims to highlight the functional aspect of artwork, allowing viewers to embrace the arts in their everyday lives.

Right on time for holiday shopping on Atwells, don't be surprised if you find the perfect gift for him, her, or even yourself! This show has a little bit of everything whether it's jewelry, furniture, accent lighting or a portrait; everything is one of a kind and hand crafted by local artisans.

Featured in this show are Andrea Valentini, Virginia Fitzgerald, Jennaca Davies, Karenna Maraj, Jeff Soderbergh, Deborah A. Bruns-Thomas, Dan Denton, Erik Bright, Joshua Enck, Jeff Edwards, Mike Pichette, and Carol Scavotto. Ewa Romaszewicz is offering portrait commissions with examples on display in the exhibition. Additionally, artwork by Kevork Mourad and Stephen Brigidi is on display.The Opening Reception for this show is Thursday, December 17, 5:00 - 9:00 PM and is combined with our monthly Art, Food & Wine.Featuring the cuisine of several restaurants from Federal Hill and wine, hand-selected by Mark Gasbarro of Gasbarro's Wines, 361 Atwells Avenue on Historic Federal Hill the event will benefit City Arts.

Go to http://www.galleryzprov.com/ for the full press release and to view a slide show of the artwork from this exhibit.
The Gallery is open 2-8PM Wednesday and 12-8 Thursday - Saturday, by chance, or by appointment.
Don't forget about FREE VALET PARKING courtesy of our neighbor Zooma, located 245 Atwells Avenue, Providence, RI 02903.


About Gallery Z
Located on Providence's Historic Atwells Avenue (Exit 21 from Interstate 95) since 2001, Gallery Z offers an eclectic collection of works by 20th-21st century Armenian, American, international, and Rhode Island artists. Opening receptions are held on the third Thursday of each month. Owner and photographer Bérge Ara Zobian, spearheading efforts to raise public interest in the arts, dedicates an entire front window to the public forum.

Also, Gallery Z is a TAX FREE ZONE. For more information, click here.
And, as always, all exhibits are free and open to the public.

The gallery can be found on the World Wide Web at
Please feel free to contact the gallery at galleryzprov@aol.com.

Gallery Hours:

Wed 2-8pm
Thurs-Sat 12-8pm
By appointment and by chance

MEMBER - Gallery Night Providence
MEMBER - PWCVB, Providence Warwick Convention Visitors Bureau
MEMBER - Federal Hill Commerce Association
MEMBER - Americans for the Arts

Directions to Gallery Z:

From the North:
Take 95 South to Exit 21. At the end of the exit ramp, take a right onto Atwells Avenue.

From the South:
Take 95 North to exit 21. At the second set of lights take a left onto Atwells Avenue.

Gallery Z is located on your right at 259 Atwells Avenue.

Thursday, December 17th
5:00 - 9:00PM

Monday, December 7, 2009

two milestones for the Dress Project


Yesterday my friends and I made a road trip to Providence, Rhode Island to drop off 5 dresses at Gallery Z to be part of their show,"Functional Objects of Desire". I am especially excited about this show, besides being an exciting show in a great space, it represent two milestones for the Dress Project! The first being that this show is the 12th juried group show for the Dress Project in 2009 (besides my two installations ~ it has been a wonderfully full year!!)!!! And secondly ~ the Dress Project has crossed state lines!!!!

The dresses that left the state are two big sculptures ~ the 'Red Alert Cocktail dress' and 'In Memory of....' and 3 mini dresses fresh of the work table. Pictured here is 'tuck under thumb and hold firmly' or chopstick dress (it is made from chopstick wrapper that have the instruction on how to use chopsticks properly). I hope to post pictures of the other two later - one is another crossword puzzle dress and the other was inspired by 'this comes from within'. I called it 'precious', made out of rice paper, feather, eggshells and glitter ~ it makes my heart soar.

The show will run from December 9th ~ December 23rd with the opening reception on December 17th 5-9pm. The Gallery is wonderful and located in an Italian neighborhood full of yummy smells. After dropping off the work we had a delicious salad and pizza just down the street from the gallery so make a plan to come by the show then grabbing a tasty bite!!!
Another fun show that is featuring a dress is Icon and Altars at the New Art Center which is ending this Sunday. There will be a closing reception Sunday, December 13th, 3-5pm with the ticket drawing @ 4pm ~ i have heard it is lots of fun to be there for the drawing.
A wonderful ending to an fantastic year!! and i send many thanks out to the universe for offering me all these amazing opportunities and giving me the support systems to be able to seize the moments!!! I am truly, TRULY grateful and hunger for more ~ wonder what 2010 will hold?!!!! thx & peace!!!

Friday, July 3, 2009

Dresses hit Wellesley!!!




The dresses are on the move, making the scene!!! the Red Alert Cocktail dress along with the Black Widow (VCR tape) dress are being featured at Shafer O’Neil Interior Design ~ 544 Washington Street, Wellesley, MA, a wonderful interior design store. They are also showing exhibiting some of the dress photographs. We installed the Red Alert dress in a window which is always fun - people stop, point and come in & comment. It is quite an attention getter.
peace





Sunday, April 26, 2009

A Visual Potpourri


Today I am off to New Canaan, CT to drop off the Red Alert Cocktail Dress at the Silvermine Guild Arts Center for the final judging for the 60th Annual Art of the Northeast show. David Lang also made the semifinal so we are making the road trip – wish us luck.




Also here is the documentation of the decay of the Don’t Slip dress. I left it outside for a good many days. I was hoping for it to go completely black/brown but I think being outside and moist might have affected it. It was also interesting how at sometimes some of the peels curled up.
day 1
day 1 ~later
day 2

day 3
day 4
day 5
day 6 ~ off to the compost!!

Lastly – here is a dress that I made over vacation. I was on an early walk with my dog when I came across a field of these ‘pods’ which I don’t know what they are called, however I have always loved them. In the fall they are ripe with seeds and have a very particular smell when you open them up. And when they dry these pods become wonderful rattles. The ones I discovered this week had spent the winter under piles of snow and now were dark, moist and flat – very reminiscent to the look of a rotting banana peel. So since this shape has been speaking to me I had to stop and make a dress. This shape begs to be part of a skirt, and just screamed to represents ribs. Near by there was a driveway which was covered with these red fallings and these became the trim of the dress.


As always when I am out on nature and moved to make a dress I am reminded on how authentic the dress shape is to me. When I am searching for the right ‘pod’ or shell or petal all other noises/voices vanish from my head and I am blessed with being in the moment of creating. Also I believe that since these dresses are temporary my critic is quiet. When I was in Portland I made a nature dress (to be discussed in another post) and during that time I had an Aha moment. I was working away in my own little world when my friend called to check in on me…She asked me if I was ok and I answered that I was exactly where I needed to be and that rang so true to me. I needed to be creating and present in that process. It has been an enlightening lesson and one I am trying to incorporate into a full life of family, children and friends.

Lastly … since it still National Poetry Month – a nod to Robert Frost. As I disappeared into my dress making zone my dog had to wait. At first he was ok sitting for a bit – we were in a park. But then as the time went on he started to get confused and it reminded me of the line from Robert Frost’s

My little horse must think it queer
To stop without a farmhouse near
Between the woods and frozen lake
The darkest evening of the year.

He gives his harness bells a shake
To ask if there is some mistake …
peace ~